We last checked in with the disgraced hedge-funder at the onset of his federal trial, “The Largest Insider-Trading Case in a Generation™,” back in early March. In the interim, trial proceedings popped up in the mainstream media now and again thanks to the funny wiretaps of Rajaratnam, who co-founded the Galleon Group, and his cronies. The recordings do not, obviously, come close to the sublimity that was the Blagojevich investigation, but they’re still pretty good:“Honestly, Rajat, I'm giving him a million dollars a year for doing literally nothing,” Rajaratnam told then Goldman Sachs board member Rajat Gupta, speaking of McKinsey partner and admitted insider-trader Anil Kumar. In another taped call, Rajaratnam, upset about a deal, said to his brother, “Oh, dude, we’re fucked. It just hit The Wall Street Journal.” Like we said: definitely sub-Blago.

Other trial highlights were few and far between, and even certain jury members struggled to pay attention. On March 16, one alternate juror, described by The New York Times as “a 35-year-old unemployed Manhattan resident with a bachelor’s degree in English” who sported “a scruffy beard, ironic glasses and a track-suit jacket” just fell asleep in the middle of the day. There was also that time that the so-called Hipster Juror rolled his eyes.

But the occasionally exciting story of Raj Rajaratnam is not yet over: he will be sentenced on July 29. According to The New York Times, he “could face as much as 19 and a half years in prison under federal sentencing guidelines.”